The sky’s the limit for Steiger’s new Vega 3.130

At a pre-ITMA 2019 press conference held by Swissmem in Lucerne on March 29th and 30th, the new Steiger Vega 3.130 compact knitting machine specifically designed for technical fabrics was introduced.

Steiger, which is now part of the Cixing Group – the world’s largest manufacturer of flat knitting machines – celebrates its 70th anniversary in 2019 and is still manufacturing at its plant in Vionnaz, Switzerland, as well as in China. The anniversary is one of a number being marked by Swissmem member companies, who between them can draw on a staggering 4,011 years of combined textile machinery know-how.

Steiger, explained sales and marketing manager Carlo Corradi, has recently been experiencing success in the field of knitted preforms for composites, and in one project with the Technical University of Dresden, for example, has successfully developed shaped truck component parts for Volvo. It is also working with a notable luggage brand on a range of the first knitted composite suitcases.

The Vega 3.130, being dedicated for the production of technical knitting, has warp and weft insertion for inlay applications of high performance yarns and a specific cam-box for semi-rigid yarns, as well as adapted sinker kinetics.

The distance between the needle-beds can be specifically adjusted and set and other key features include a special take-down for 3D products and a new system of clamp and scissors with a selectable carriage inversion ramp for optimised production.

Following its success with these and other projects, Steiger is now opening a new business called Stitchlab, dedicated to reinforcements.

Central to developments, said Corradi, will be the new Model+ software for machine programming, enabling the highest level of automatisation to be achieved while being the easiest system possible for users.

“Our target has been that even those with no experience of the machines at all should be able to quickly get to grips with it,” Corradi said. “The aim is to avoid prototyping through simulation and we have a huge library that developers can draw on.”